Enlarge ImageRequest to buy this photoJessica Hill | AP photoWhite roses with the faces of victims of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting are displayed on a telephone pole near the school on the one-month anniversary of the mass shooting.

Children who survived last month’s shooting rampage at Connecticut’s Sandy Hook Elementary
School have recorded a version of “Over the Rainbow” to raise money for charity.

Twenty-one children from Newtown, Conn., sang the song yesterday with singer-songwriter
Ingrid Michaelson on ABC’s “Good Morning America.” Most of them are current and former students of
the school where 20 first-graders and six staff members were killed.

They recorded "Over the Rainbow" on Monday at the Fairfield, Conn., home of Chris Frantz and
Tina Weymouth, two former members of the Talking Heads and Tom Tom Club rock bands. It went on
sale on
Amazon and iTunes, with proceeds benefiting the United Way of Western
Connecticut and the Newtown Youth Academy.

Kayla Verga, 10, said she was singing for a friend, 6-year-old Jessica Rekos, who was killed
in the massacre.

"Singing the song makes me feel like she's with me and she's beside me, singing along with
me," Kayla told "GMA."

Another girl, 10-year-old Sandy Hook student Jane Shearin, added, "I really want to be kind
to the people who have lost their loved ones and help them to recover from their sorrow."

Gunman Adam Lanza went on a shooting spree with a semiautomatic rifle in the school on Dec.
14 after having killed his mother at their home in Newtown. He fatally shot himself as police
arrived at the school. It's still unclear what motivated the attack.

The Sandy Hook children have returned to classes in a neighboring town at a building renamed
for their old school. Newtown officials and residents have begun discussing what to do with the
school where the shootings occurred.

Some parents of children killed in the massacre spoke out yesterday, calling for a national
dialogue to help prevent similar tragedies.